With 14 coaches, 28 players, one commissioner and two full days to interview them all, the ACC’s annual preseason football media event usually ends up becoming an exercise in information overload. This year’s recently completed ACC Kickoff in Greensboro was no exception.

There were so many storylines discussed that it might take half the season to write about them all. So instead of trying, I’ve narrowed the topics down to my top 10 takeaways from a busy weekend at Grandover Resort. After muddling through hours of football talk on my recording devise – an exercise that took nearly a week to complete – here they from Nos. 10 to 1:

7. A lot is being expected of a lot of inexperienced quarterbacks this season.

Duke’s Anthony Boone is one of only four returning starting QBs in the ACC

There were only three quarterbacks among the 28 players that represented the ACC’s 14 teams at this year’s Football Kickoff. What makes the number even more startling is that one of the three (Clemson’s Cole Stoudt) has never started a college game and another (UNC’s Marquise Williams) may end up losing his job to a redshirt freshman.

Other than Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston at Florida State, the only other returning starters are Williams, Duke’s Anthony Boone, Virginia’s David Watford and Syracuse’s Terrel Hunt. That means a lot of teams are going to be resting their hopes this season on a lot of young quarterbacks with little or no experience.

Although big things are expected from newcomers including N.C. State’s Jacoby Brissett, Virginia Tech’s Brendan Motley – who actually received a preseason Player of the Year vote – Louisville’s Will Gardner, Virginia’s Greyson Lambert and Clemson’s DeShaun Watson, nobody knows yet how they’ll perform under pressure.

Needless to say, there’s a significant league-wide lack of experience at the most important position on the field.